A telegram saved his life, but his photos were the inspiration for James Camerons movie.

By SARAH MACDONALD Catholic News Service

Courtesy Father Browne S.J. Collection | CNS

This is one of a collection of photographs of the Titanic taken by the late Irish Jesuit Father Frank Browne. "Father Browne's Titanic Album" has been reprinted to mark the centenary of the demise of the massive liner. Father Browne became a prominent documentary photographer and a much-decorated chaplain in the British army in World War I.

DUBLIN  Commemorations of the sinking of the Titanic 100 years ago will put the spotlight on a young Irish priest whose photographs are some of the only surviving images of life onboard the liner on its first and last voyage.

Jesuit Father Frank Browne, 1880-1960, became a prominent documentary photographer and a much-decorated chaplain in the British army in World War I.

A collection of his photographs, "Father Browne's Titanic Album" has been reprinted to mark the centenary of the demise of the massive liner, which was constructed in Belfast, Ireland, and was believed to be unsinkable.

More than 1,500 people died when it sank April 15, 1912.

The new edition of the book is edited by Jesuit Father Edward O'Donnell, and the foreword is written by Robert Ballard, who first located the ship's wreckage in September 1985, the same month as a chance finding of 42,000 of Father Browne's photographs in the basement of the Jesuits' headquarters in Dublin.

Frank Browne lived an eventful life. As a novice he met Pope Pius X in 1909 when he accompanied his uncle, Bishop Robert Browne of Cloyne, to a private audience at the Vatican. He was also a university classmate of Irish writer James Joyce, who featured the young seminarian as "Mr. Browne the Jesuit" in his masterpiece "Finnegans Wake."

In 1912, the Jesuit novice was still three years from ordination. Because of a gift from his uncle, he was able to experience the Titanic's luxurious accommodation in the initial stages of its maiden voyage, from Southampton, England, to Cherbourg, France, and on to Queenstown, Ireland.

While onboard, the self-taught photographer managed to obtain pictures of the first-class accommodation and dining rooms. He also captured the gymnasium, the library and passengers enjoying a stroll on the promenade, as well as many passengers in third class, recording some of those who would later perish in the freezing waters of the Atlantic. He took the last image of the Titanic's captain, Edward Smith.

Father Browne's images of the ship's accommodation and passengers have been pored over by maritime historians, engineers and filmmakers seeking answers to a tragedy that still grips the public's imagination. Hollywood film director James Cameron used his photographs to re-create sets for his blockbuster movie.

The Jesuit's image of 6-year-old Robert Douglas Spedden playing with his spinning top on the promenade, watched by his father Frederic, is one of the most famous of the collection. Cameron re-created the image in the film.

The young Jesuit photographed the Titanic leaving port for the last time as it left Queenstown, in County Cork, for New York. He could have been onboard: An American couple he befriended on the ship offered to fund the final leg of the journey to New York.

From the Titanic, he sent a telegram to his provincial in Dublin to request permission. However, a frosty telegram awaited him in Queenstown: "Get off that ship."

When news of the Titanic's disastrous fate reached Father Browne, he folded the telegram and put it into his wallet and kept it there for the rest of his life. He later said it was the only time holy obedience had saved a life.

Interesting tag line. You just happen to have left off the first portion of that passage, thereby changing the meaning of the verse. This is a common hermeneutical error, so don’t feel alone.

The entire passage is set out with Jesus telling the disciples that it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God. The disciples have exclaimed in an astonished manner, “Then who can be saved?” Jesus explains, “And looking upon them Jesus said to them, ‘With men this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.’”

I bring this to your attention because your tag line’s brevity implies that if a person tries something enlisting the help of God, anything is possible. That is precisely the opposite of its meaning. Even some of your “official interpreters” would know this. The meaning of the passage is that IN SPITE of a man’s best efforts to save himself, even by attempting to follow God, the possibility of success is zero. And, the disciples recognize that this puts everyone at risk.

Jesus explains that is exactly the problem. Men believe they can save themselves by sincere effort or devout attitudes, but that is IMPOSSIBLE. However, if God determines to do it, the rescue is simple. Now, if that is what you meant, good job. If not, then I would suggest a new tag line.

Cameron also owed Browne for his photo of the ships Marconi Room, which he had taken when he was sending his clerical superior the Marconigram request to travel to New York. The photo was the only picture to be taken of the room  and in any Titanic films since, the Marconi room had been based it on Brownes partially exposed photograph. Browne also took the last known photograph of Captain Edward Smith.

The Second Sunday of Easter celebrates the many mercies our Divine Lord has shown to us and the whole world. This Sunday also is engraved in memory as the one-hundredth anniversary of the Titanic tragedy. In 1907, Captain Edward J. Smith, then captain of the Adriatic, and felicitously unaware that five years later he would command the largest moving object in the world, told a newspaper reporter:

When anyone asks me how I can best describe my experience in nearly forty years at sea, I merely say, uneventful. Of course there have been winter gales, and storms and fog and the like. But in all my experience, I have never been in any accident of any sort worth speaking about. I have seen but one vessel in distress in all my years at sea. I never saw a wreck and never have been wrecked nor was I ever in any predicament that threatened to end in disaster of any sort.

A commonly accepted practice to delineate partial verses (which are, by the way, purely man-made constructions for convenience) is to use lower case "a", "b", "c", etc, depending on the complexity of the verse.

The Jesuit's image of 6-year-old Robert Douglas Spedden playing with his spinning top on the promenade, watched by his father Frederic, is one of the most famous of the collection.

Indeed it is.

James Cameron, in his movie 'Titanic', worked this photo into the action. This scene is recreated when (the fictional) Jack Dawson sneaks into First Class to see the (equally fictional) Rose. You'll see him clamber over the railing in the background, and swipe the coat that you see draped over the deck chair behind the stanchion.

As a Titanic buff of 40 years or so, I sat bolt upright at that point- I recognized it instantly. :-)

28
posted on 04/15/2012 4:05:10 PM PDT
by Riley
(The Fourth Estate is the Fifth Column.)

None in particular. I had a copy of ‘Father Browne’s Titanic Album’, which I think I lost in a move. I have E.E. O’Donnells ‘Last Days of the Titanic’ here, (coffee table bargain book) that has some of them in it. I’m convinced though that I haven’t seen them all. I wouldn’t mind having something authoritative.

This thread prompted me to go off looking for them in particular, I ran across this:

Designating the quote with a more precise reference from the man-made enumeration might clarify its location, but the impression would remain the meaning is: Try something with God and you will succeed.

When watching Titanic in 3D, I too remembered seeing a photo of a boy with a top in one of the Titanic books. Kudos to James Cameron for bringing us that moment. Now I have to investigate if that little boy survived.

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